Kingdom Hearts 3 (PS4) Review

Electric Donald Carnival

Score: 8 / 10

Genre: RPG

ESRB Rating: E10 (Everyone 10+)

To critique a game like Kingdom Hearts 3 is to walk an impossible tightrope. Seventeen years of winding narrative threads borne out of unthinkable connections between Square Enix and Disney superstars have all led to this: the conclusive chapter in one of the most popular video game series of the modern era. Kingdom Hearts IIIis a game so buoyed by sky-high expectations that it would be nothing short of miraculous for it to garner universal acclaim.

Evaluating Kingdom Hearts III as ultimately “good” or “bad” is a task that demands intimate familiarity with an unbelievably dense storyline spanning numerous sequels, prequels, and side stories across a wealth of platforms—all necessary to fully appreciate the narrative payoff that bookends the so-called “Dark Seeker Saga” that began with Kingdom Heartsin 2002. As someone who has played every game in the series, I continue to insist that the Kingdom Hearts story is genuinely intelligible, if overblown and a tad inaccessible. At its core, the series is an extended musing on the power of interpersonal connection and the duality of human nature. It falls to Kingdom Hearts 3, then, to wrap up the myriad loose ends left by its predecessors over the past seventeen years by returning to those core themes and delivering one final message to its players.

Having only sunk some twenty-odd hours into my own playthrough, I can’t yet determine whether Kingdom Hearts 3 accomplishes that unenviable task. What I can say is that it is, without a doubt, the biggest, boldest, flashiest entry in the saga—one that builds upon the gameplay systems of its forebears in a kaleidoscopic carnival of action RPG jubilance.

Kingdom Hearts 3 – Review Images Provided by Square Enix

The worlds traversed by protagonist Sora in Kingdom Hearts IIIlargely represent a newer wave of Disney hallmarks, from Toy Story to Tangled and the ever-popular Frozen. Each is rendered with the utmost reverence to the source material—sometimes so faithfully that I question the essentiality of, say, using game assets to reduplicate musical numbers I’ve heard performed ad nauseam in every corner of pop culture over the last few years. (Yes, I’m taking a shot at Frozen. No, I will not let it go.) What impresses me most about Kingdom Hearts III‘s implementation of Disney properties is the way it organically weaves its core themes into each world’s subplot. The world of Monsters Inc. leverages the movie’s core conceit—the idea of using children’s screams as a power source—as a way to explore the manifestation of the Unversed, foes created from negative emotions. The Tangled and Frozen worlds both concern themselves with the nefarious Organization XIII’s attempt to groom new candidates on the side of light (Rapunzel, Anna, and Elsa) in an attempt to ignite another Keyblade War. The Disney and Square Enix halves of Kingdom Hearts have historically not always been in perfect harmony, but Kingdom Hearts III has done an admirable job in meshing them together in the worlds I’ve experienced thus far.

Early footage of Kingdom Hearts III (and my hands-on time with Kingdom Hearts II.8 – A Fragmentary Passage) had me worried that
the game’s interpretations of those Disney worlds might feel disproportionately
small and lifeless, as has been the case in some previous entries. Luckily, the
complete opposite is true. Never before have Kingdom Hearts worlds been so lively. The game’s bustling towns are
full of NPCs, environments are varied and feature fantastic verticality, and
most every area is visually distinctive. The Frozen world once again lags
behind in this regard, featuring too many bland snowscapes and indistinguishable
cliffside paths. But on the other end of the spectrum, the Pirates of the
Caribbean world is positively enormous, with an entire overworld to explore by
naval vessel, ship-to-ship combat, and underwater exploration (with manageable
controls!). The Caribbean alone is the size of a smaller game’s virtual real
estate. Bigger isn’t necessarily better, of course, but it’s so well-executed
that I can’t turn my nose up at it.

Kingdom Hearts 3 – Review Images Provided by Square Enix

For better or worse, the gravity-defying
action of Kingdom Hearts’ combat
systemhas become increasingly
over-the-top as the years have gone by. Keyblade combos and magic spells gave
way to style-shifting Drive Forms, which gave way to adaptable Command Decks,
which gave way to impossibly zippy Flowmotion movement abilities… Players
don’t glide through combat in Kingdom
Hearts so much as they ricochet off of every available surface like an
electrified-pinball-meets-Cuisinart-blender.

Kingdom
Hearts III ups the ante once again with transforming
Keyblades that drastically change Sora’s attack output in exciting ways. Bladed
yo-yos, icy claws, and bee-launching honey pistols are only a few of the new
additions to Sora’s repertoire, and when combined with his arsenal of magic
spells, character-summoning Link abilities, and cooperative team attacks, they
make every encounter an opportunity to innovate in the field of dispatching
Heartless (or Nobodies, or Unversed…every former foe seems to have made it
back for curtain call). Also new to Kingdom
Hearts III are Attractions, weaponized versions of popular rides from
real-world Disney theme parks. Each is a feast for the senses and deadly
besides; I beamed with genuine delight the first time I made the neon-studded
Pirate Ship swing to and fro, catching Heartless in its wake, and grinned
ear-to-ear watching Sora, Donald, and Goofy share a laugh while careening
around a forest on a destructive Splash Run.

Kingdom Hearts 3 – Review Images Provided by Square Enix

Throughout the spectacle of Kingdom Hearts III, the keyword that
returns to my mind again and again is “joy.” Regardless of how it
fares as the conclusion to a story seventeen years in the making, it is a
playable expression of joyfulness. Laughs, smiles, light, and sound coalesce in
a celebration of Disney and Square Enix that really, truly strives to meet the
expectations of longtime fans both eager and embittered.

If, at any point during Kingdom Hearts III‘s jaw-droppingly gorgeous introductory cinematic, you found yourself struggling to piece together the layers of symbolism present in every frame, you aren’t alone. But if your connection with the series has endured long enough to lead you to this point—reading this article, reflecting on your experiences, wondering where Sora’s meandering path will deliver him at the end of it all—then you owe it to yourself to see Kingdom Hearts III through. I’ll return with my own final thoughts once I’ve closed that door.

Update:
January 31st, 2019

With nearly double the playtime under my belt
since I last wrote about Kingdom Hearts
III, I’ve at last seen Sora’s final adventure through to the finish line.
My head is still spinning as my exhausted brain tries to piece together the
implications of every over-the-top piece of narrative resolution backloaded
into the game’s lengthy climax. We’re talking several hours’ worth of fated
clashes between darkness and light, all of which are genuinely necessary to
resolve enduring conflicts. With twist after twist and an ever-raising bar for
physic-defying visual absurdity, these scenes are simultaneously some of the
game’s best and most befuddling.

Kingdom Hearts 3 – Review Images Provided by Square Enix

Suffice it to say that Kingdom Hearts III genuinely works hard to provide a clear-cut
conclusion to the series. Most arcs are satisfactorily concluded, although
several characters are reduced to background roles that vastly undersell their
importance in the lore up to this point. Without venturing into spoiler
territory, I can think of two specific characters who were completely
underutilized in Kingdom Hearts III despite
a mountain of signposting that they would be integral to the plot. The Square
Enix side of the Kingdom Hearts lore
is also completely sidelined in favor of Disney cameos, which I personally
found a bit disappointing. Furthermore, the game’s agonizingly cryptic epilogue
movie once again takes a single unresolved plot thread and twists it into an
infuriating cliffhanger for…who knows what, really? At this point, I am weary
of the teasing that has become a staple of the Kingdom Hearts continuity. Did Elsa’s unnecessarily long musical
number go in one ear and out the other? It’s time for the Kingdom Hearts universe to have a fresh start. I repeat: let it go,
Tetsuya Nomura.

My thoughts on Kingdom Hearts III remain largely positive in spite of the mental
gymnastics required to fully process its multi-layered finale. It’s one of the
most genuinely upbeat and positive games I’ve had the pleasure of playing in
the last several years, and it retains the same whimsical spirit I’ve come to
expect from the series. That feel-good message—perfectly encapsulated in the
bond between Sora, Donald, and Goofy—is what Kingdom Hearts is all about.

The power of friendship is a mighty force
indeed.

8

Kingdom Hearts III is the biggest, boldest, flashiest entry in the saga—one that builds upon the gameplay systems of its forebears in a kaleidoscopic carnival of action RPG jubilance.

A copy of the game was Publisher Supplied for this review. You can find additional information about CGMagazine’s ethics policy on our policies page.